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Bernie issues Australian GP warning
THE Australian Grand Prix is "probably" the least economically viable in the Formula One calendar, and is unlikely to continue if Melbourne loses its appetite to fit the bill for the race, commercial supremo Bernie Ecclestone has said.
Melbourne has hosting rights until 2015, but the rising cost of holding the race has fueled growing calls for the state government of Victoria to ditch it.
From reporting a loss of less than 2 million Australian dollars (US$2.14 million) in the first grand prix at Melbourne's Albert Park circuit in 1996, taxpayers now pay more than US$50 million, with the costs expected to rise further.
The Liberal government has nonetheless thrown its support behind the race, saying it wants to keep the GP beyond 2015, citing its promotional value to Australia's second city.
Ecclestone said if Melbourne could not afford the race, it was unlikely any other Australian city could. "If we were having a divorce from our friends in Melbourne, we would probably be walking away from Australia," the Briton said in comments published by local media yesterday.
"Because I can't see how Adelaide could make it happen, or anywhere else, if Melbourne can't," he said, referring to the South Australian state capital, the grand prix's inaugural venue.
"The race itself, is probably the least viable of all the races we have."
While Ecclestone has said he wants the race to remain in Melbourne, he has threatened to take it elsewhere should local officials try to negotiate lower license fees that are estimated to cost between US$20-30 million a year.
He has also complained about the time-zone being unfriendly for European broadcasters and reiterated his call for Melbourne to turn it into a night race, like the Singapore GP.
The Australian GP opens the F1 season on March 18.
Melbourne has hosting rights until 2015, but the rising cost of holding the race has fueled growing calls for the state government of Victoria to ditch it.
From reporting a loss of less than 2 million Australian dollars (US$2.14 million) in the first grand prix at Melbourne's Albert Park circuit in 1996, taxpayers now pay more than US$50 million, with the costs expected to rise further.
The Liberal government has nonetheless thrown its support behind the race, saying it wants to keep the GP beyond 2015, citing its promotional value to Australia's second city.
Ecclestone said if Melbourne could not afford the race, it was unlikely any other Australian city could. "If we were having a divorce from our friends in Melbourne, we would probably be walking away from Australia," the Briton said in comments published by local media yesterday.
"Because I can't see how Adelaide could make it happen, or anywhere else, if Melbourne can't," he said, referring to the South Australian state capital, the grand prix's inaugural venue.
"The race itself, is probably the least viable of all the races we have."
While Ecclestone has said he wants the race to remain in Melbourne, he has threatened to take it elsewhere should local officials try to negotiate lower license fees that are estimated to cost between US$20-30 million a year.
He has also complained about the time-zone being unfriendly for European broadcasters and reiterated his call for Melbourne to turn it into a night race, like the Singapore GP.
The Australian GP opens the F1 season on March 18.
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